I don't have any fresh information about the Falklands/Malvinas war but was just wondering how British intelligence missed the Argentine armada massing in their coastal ports at the time, especially as Argentina made no secret of their claim to the islands and intention to retake them. The Thatcher government, I understand, had withdrawn naval cover in the South Atlantic and changed the status of British commonwealth citizens giving the Galtieri regime inviting signals, Thatcher like the Bush regime greatly benefited from the conflict but in her defence , I've never seen someone bricking it so much on TV when the news came out.

The Conservative party historically have not been a party of war in the same way as the Labour party has.
Clearly Thatcher did not expect for us to be attacked and quite rightly was surprised.
But thankfully we liberated the Falklands without too much bloodshed and atrocities.
Contrast that with Blair's colonial unprovoked wars of agression and genocide against sevral countries. Not forgetting the diamond raid in Sierra Leone and the Depleted Uranium bombing of Serbia.
A million dead Iraqis and a land contaminated for thousands of years.
Contrast that with Thatcher who avoided launching an offensive against Argentina and merely attacked the occupying forces with a minimum of fatalities.
There was no torturing of captured Argentine soldiers.
There was no hooding and shackling and holding for years without trial.

The liberation of the Falklands was a just war.
The invasion and genocide in Iraq and Afghanistan are war crimes.
Never muddy the water._________________

Yeah yeah, but isn't prevention better than cure? wouldn't it have been better if like the previous minority labour administration the tories had maintained the naval patrols round the Falklands/Malvinas?

I recall Thatch aiding Reagan in a terrorist strike against Gadaffi in Tripoli while the French rightly wouldn't allow US bombers use of French airspace after their launch in the UK on their murderous illegal mission,She was a hawk in the first Gulf war against her former ali Saddam and, of course, she ordered the sinking of the Belgrano outside the exclusion zone infamously celebrated in that filthy Murdoch rag and tory propaganda organ with the headline GOTCHA!.

As ever, there is more going on than karlos/stelios single-prism view of everything would have us believe.

First thing to appreciate is that there is no singular unitary dominant guiding power, but rather a series of factions and alliances that slither in and out of the spotlight circle of Global Power in an ever changing kaleidoscope as the factions' internal values change to suit their perceptions of what their own best interests are in an ever changing world, together with existing machinery already in motion. Think minefield.

So in March 1982, when the miltary junta running Argentina saw an opportunity with the withdrawal of a major portion of the British South Atlantic presence (the Endurance) it was perceived by them (alone) as a strategic signal, because they direly needed an external prop to buck up their failing economy and demoralised population. And so - claiming historical precedent as is usual with these things - they invaded with reported mass popular support.

In reality it was of course caused merely by a cost-cutting exercise by the busy little monetarist bees in the UK Treasury, busily stripping the government expenditure component of the GDP to double-plus prove the folly of (previous) socialism, and who couldn't see beyond the end of their annual balance sheets.

If it had happened in this decade, the Argentines would have no doubt prevailed and some convoluted excuse would have been devised for why they should.

However, unfortunately for them, in the 1980's the UK had available an operational strategic component of its airborne nuclear deterrent still active, which may or may not (but provenly could) nuke Buenos Aires, and in addition a Royal Navy designed to and strong enough to contain - or at least seriously challenge - the Russian threat to the Iceland gap and beyond.

The relevance of this is that the Royal Navy's Polaris (and now latterly Trident) submarine-bourne nuclear deterrent was operated by what is called a 'dual key' arrangement, meaning it requires explicit US approval before launch. Whereas the run-down but still existing remains of the V-Force, as demonstrated by the Vulcan that bombed the runway at Port Stanley, was wholly independent. Those 'Black Buck' Vulcan missions whose actual total results could have been achieved with a two Harrier jet strike were actually a signal to Galtieri of the Unthinkable comin'-a-knockin' if he continued.

In short, the UK didn't fold in the game of diplomacy poker, and as an added but wholly un-envisaged benefit, the Argentine military junta couldn't withstand the shame of its thwarted imperial adventure and instead folded itself shortly afterwards.

While the overall outcome may well have been heartening in retrospect (a civilian government is alway preferable to a military one), it should also be remembered that without support from the fascist Pinochet in Chile (hence Thatcher and her minions' later support for him in his hour of need) none of it may have played out as the planners in London hoped or intended.

We may know what really happened about 2050 or so._________________Dissolution of the Global Corporations.
It's the only way.

As I recall on the basis of distant memory, the US and Argentine Navies had been holding joint exercises in the months previous to the Falklands conflict.
Much as with Saddam and Kuwait, the Argentinian admirals had been tipped the nudge and the wink by the Americans that Britain wouldn't do much if the Argentinians claimed their Malvinas physically. And the dupes went along with this
This was a contrived war aimed at saving Thatcher's ass. She was very unpopular when this war came out of the blue.
She needed to destroy traditional British values in order to open up the progress towards the NWO
The conflict was a deadly messy and constructed affair with an outcome never in doubt
A solid trigger for the destruction of the UK and the establishment of a servile service state via Blairism and the presently collapsing Brown-mediated state of affairs
As I recall it many UK servicemen were killed or seriously burned when a French Exocet missile hit a British ship, while hundreds of Argentinian sailors died when a retreating Argentinian vessel was sunk to the tune of Murdoch's Sun's "Gotcha"
This was a sick murderous contrivance in line with what we have seen since_________________http://www.exopolitics-leeds.co.uk/introduction

The outcome was never a foregone conclusion until the British had secured the landing grounds on the islands. If there had been a major disaster, for example the Argentine Exocets had hit their intended targets (the Canberra and Invincible), there would have been no way the British could have retaken the Falklands in the short term. A pretty risky stratagem to save political disaster I think.

What would have happened to Maggie's popularity if there had been a military disaster? Was the Conservative upsurge in popularity due to having won the war, or due to the war having been won at fairly low cost?

I have read suggestions however that the Admiralty was complicit in the decision to withdraw Endurance, maybe in the hope of an Argentine invasion? At a time when defence cuts were primarily hitting the Navy the hardest, maybe the Lordships felt this was the best way to prove the worth of the Navy? If that was the case it certainly worked, for example the sale of Invincible to Australia was cancelled in the aftermath of the war.

The outcome was never a foregone conclusion until the British had secured the landing grounds on the islands. If there had been a major disaster, for example the Argentine Exocets had hit their intended targets (the Canberra and Invincible), there would have been no way the British could have retaken the Falklands in the short term. A pretty risky stratagem to save political disaster I think.

What would have happened to Maggie's popularity if there had been a military disaster? Was the Conservative upsurge in popularity due to having won the war, or due to the war having been won at fairly low cost?

I have read suggestions however that the Admiralty was complicit in the decision to withdraw Endurance, maybe in the hope of an Argentine invasion? At a time when defence cuts were primarily hitting the Navy the hardest, maybe the Lordships felt this was the best way to prove the worth of the Navy? If that was the case it certainly worked, for example the sale of Invincible to Australia was cancelled in the aftermath of the war.

That all depends on whether you think the Conservatives would have been able to get re-elected after a long, drawn out, and bloody war? The government was prepared to accept 10,000 British casualties, would the electorate have found this so appealing? If you consider British resources to fight a conventional war 8,000 miles away, at that time, it was incredibly risky. As it was ships like the Sheffield were sacrificed because our forces had no answer to Exocet.

Dont try and engage me. This was all a little contrivance with disastrous consequences.As mote it be. It wasn't to be anything other.There is no dispute here. It turned out in the way as intended. Don't try and pretend there were variables.It was all part of the Thatcherite plot which ended when she wouldn't go along with the EU. Simple as that. End_________________http://www.exopolitics-leeds.co.uk/introduction

Dont try and engage me. This was all a little contrivance with disastrous consequences.As mote it be. It wasn't to be anything other.There is no dispute here. It turned out in the way as intended. Don't try and pretend there were variables.It was all part of the Thatcherite plot which ended when she wouldn't go along with the EU. Simple as that. End

Never let reams of evidence get in the way of fanciful tales and armchair 'historians' who always know better, the mighty Paul Wright has spoken so I shall now (head bowed) respectfully refrain from further discussion. Sorry for trying to engage in discussion on a forum. (You may wish to look up the word 'forum' in the OED)

Never let reams of evidence get in the way of fanciful tales and armchair 'historians' who always know better, the mighty Paul Wright has spoken so I shall now (head bowed) respectfully refrain from further discussion.

Imagine how different the 80s could have been if the Falklands/Malvinas war had never happened........

I wonder what Thatcherism would had been like without the cushioning effect of the north sea oil revenues and being liberated from the need to buy foreign oil? Wasn't Gulf War I LIHOP? Bush made it clear he didn't have a defence pact with Kuwait encouraging Saddam to invade.

Now that it is over $100 a barrel and North Sea oil is running out perhaps we will soon find out. Don't forget during most of the last 25 years oil has been relatively cheap and was less than $10 a barrel for quite a while, after the peak of over $30 a barrel in the early eighties. In fact at $100 a barrel it is about the same as it was 25 years ago allowing for inflation. It has not been necessary nor economical to exploit KNOWN reserves in the south Atlantic - until now._________________"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.

It's exactly three decades after the Argentine cruiser General Belgrano was sunk in the first major British attack of the Falklands war. RT sits down with historian and author Hugh Bicheno to discuss whether the conflict was worth it

Razor’s Edge: the Unofficial History of the Falklands War
‘It may seem impossible for anything original to appear about the Falklands War of 1982, so much has been written about it, but Hugh Bicheno’s book is that thing. His depiction of the origins and direction of the war is exhilaratingly politically incorrect . . . and whether they agree or not, readers will find this book gripping and discomfiting.’
John Keegan, Daily Telegraph
http://www.hughbicheno.co.uk/razors.html

‘Readers will by now perceive that Bicheno is not a mincer of words. He spares nobody. . . But he knows his stuff about how soldiers fight battles, and he has done us all a service by explaining them so well for a new generation.’
Max Hastings, Daily Mail

The working title was ‘Guilt, Complicity and Shame’, which ended up being early chapter titles. I was an intelligence officer posted at the Buenos Aires embassy during the 1970s and knew very well that the war came about because of the cowardly bad faith of the policy pursued by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) under successive British governments, from Harold Wilson to Margaret Thatcher inclusive. Anticipating that the announced ‘Official History’ would continue the process of whitewashing begun by the shameless Franks Report of 1983, I decided to tell it like it was. Although the old lie about an ‘intelligence failure’ still circulates, it has been a source of pride to me to note that since Razor’s Edge was published the politicians who for twenty-five years sheltered behind the falsehood began to admit that they were better informed than they thought it convenient to mention when events were still fresh in the public mind.

Landing Ship Logistic RFA Sir Galahad
RFA Sir Galahad after being set ablaze by bombs dropped from Skyhawks during the Falklands War.
David Blair, chief foreign correspondent 24 AUGUST 2016 • 6:34AM
Israel sold weapons to Argentina at the height of the Falklands War in 1982, according to newly declassified Foreign Office files.
British diplomats cited evidence that Israel had supplied the Argentine military junta with arms that were used against the Task Force during the campaign to liberate the islands.
Israeli military exports before the war included the Skyhawk jets that would later be used to bomb British warships, killing dozens of soldiers, sailors and marines.
Four British warships were sunk by bombs dropped from Skyhawks, including RFA Sir Galahad, a troop carrier that was set ablaze while anchored in Bluff Cove, killing 48 sailors and soldiers. Simon Weston, the badly burned veteran, was among the survivors. Another four ships were damaged by Skyhawks.
Prince Charles talking to Guardsman Simon Weston of the Welsh Guards
Prince Charles talking to Guardsman Simon Weston of the Welsh Guards

A book published in Argentina in 2011 exposed how Israel armed General Galtieri’s junta, dispatching weaponry to Buenos Aires on secret cargo flights routed through Peru. The Foreign Office files provide further evidence.
The documents state that Israeli military exports to Argentina continued after the Falklands War and were still happening in 1984. By then, Israel had abandoned its previous policy of denying that any weapons sales were taking place.
Instead, the country’s argument was that deals with Argentina were essential to sustain its domestic arms industry – and Britain was also supplying munitions to Israel’s enemies in the Arab world.
A memorandum from C.W. Long, then head of the Near East and North Africa Department at the Foreign Office, states: “Israel was one of the few countries to supply Argentina with arms during the Falklands conflict and has continued to do so.”
Israeli Air Force A-4 Skyhawk
Israeli Air Force A-4 Skyhawk
The document, released by the National Archives and dated Nov 16, 1984, adds that Israel was, at that time, poised to sell Argentina spy planes designed to gather electronic and signals intelligence. The document states that Sir Geoffrey Howe, then foreign secretary, had personally asked Israel’s government not to go ahead.
But Mr Long thought Israel would pay no attention. “I do not believe the Israelis are to be moved on this issue,” he writes.
“This is not satisfactory, but Israeli interests in Argentina will outweigh any readiness they might otherwise feel to be helpful to us.”
The document is filed alongside a copy of an article from a specialist journal stating that Israel had sold Skyhawk jets to Argentina’s air force before the Falklands War.
In his book, Operation Israel, the Argentine journalist Hernan Dobry writes that Israel provided the spare parts and long range fuel tanks needed to keep these aircraft in action against the Task Force. When British diplomats confronted their Israeli counterparts with evidence of arms sales, they were met with blanket denials.
The official history of the Falklands War, written by Lawrence Freedman, states: “British troops entering Port Stanley at the end of the war came across Israeli equipment.”
The Falkland Islands - by numbersThe Falkland Islands - by numbersPlay!01:03

Menachem Begin, then Israel’s prime minister, had begun his career as commander of the Irgun, the Jewish underground which fought the British in Palestine in the 1940s.
A fellow Irgun fighter, Dov Gruner, was hanged by the British in 1947. In Operation Israel, Mr Dobry suggests Begin saw arming Galtieri as a way of exacting revenge against Britain. After authorising the sale of weapons during the Falklands War, Begin reportedly said: “Dov up there is going to be happy with the decision.”_________________--
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
http://aangirfan.blogspot.comhttp://aanirfan.blogspot.com
Martin Van Creveld: Let me quote General Moshe Dayan: "Israel must be like a mad dog, too dangerous to bother."
Martin Van Creveld: I'll quote Henry Kissinger: "In campaigns like this the antiterror forces lose, because they don't win, and the rebels win by not losing."

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